Shadow on the Prairie: Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet A History in Documents By Kimberly Rokala A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of English University of Manitoba Winnipeg, Manitoba (c) August,2003 THE TINIVERSITY OF MANITOBA FACT]LTY OF GR,{DUATE STUDIES ++++ú COPYRIGHT PERMISSION PAGE Shadow on the Prøíríe: Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet A llistory in Documents BY Kimberly Rokala A ThesisÆracticum submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies of The University of Manitoba in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Master of Arts KÍmberly Rokala @ 2003 Permission has been granted to the Library of The University of Manitoba to lend or sell copies of this thesis/practicum, to the National Library of Canada to microfilm this thesis and to lend or sell copies of the film, and to University Microfilm Inc. to publish an abstract of this thesis/practicum. This reproduction or copy of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright o\ilner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express wriffen authorization from the copyright owner. Rokala I Acknowledgments I gratefully acknowledge my debt to everyone at the Royal Winnipeg Ballet who, over the years, have inspired me with their artistry and particular form of transcendence. I gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Professor David Arnason whose advice and suggestions have been invaluable in completing this project and whose assignment in his I4rinnipeg in Literatur¿ course provided the inspiration for this thesis. Rokala 2 To my mom, who carried me in her heart To my dad, for inspiring me academically and otherwise To Leslie, for her wit and wisdom Rokala 3 cvtr PeopLe wLLL sLeeT owe kvtwdYed l¿eaYs, awd wkew we awal?ew, Lt wLtL be tl^e artLsLs wlno wLLL Lead, ws. -LovtLs tzLeL Rokala 4 rabLe of oowter¡"ts Acþ"wowLedgvwewts L >edLcatLow ¿ rabLe of Cowtewts + Abstract b chapter lwtrodvtctLow ô ¿_ shadow ow tlne PraLrLe 1q*J -5 rhe qreat rLre (tgs+) '?1 rhe spohr Era eveLyw qq Çver A{ter ApVewdLces Ôr\ A it trweLLwe of the RÐAaL wLwwr¡eg J-ôi BALLet Rokala Þawcels of tl^e RnUaL WLwwt¡eg 9b BaLLet, Past awd, ?resewt worVzs cLted, LOg WorVzs CowsuLted L09 Rokala 6 Abstract: Shadow on the Prairie: Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet A History in Documents Kimberly Kay Rokala University of Manitoba The fnst chapter is an introduction to my creative writing thesis, an imagined history, based on my research and readings, of Canada's Royal Wiruripeg Ballet and the multi-genre texts which inspired it. These texts include Michael Ondaatje's The Collected Works of BÌlly the Kid; Frank Davey's The Abbotsford Guide to India; and Tim O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods. There is a brief discussion of the techniques I employed from each text in terms of my own writing, with examples from Ondaatje, Davey and O'Brien as well as my thesis. The introduction also provides an overview of the subsequent chapters and their contents, respectively: Shadow on the Prairie; The Great Fire; The Spohr Ero; Evelyn; and Ever After. The second, third, fourtlL fifth and sixth chapters are imagined documents in the form of a multi-genre text of Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet and its evolution as a grassroots prairie arts organization. The collection of pieces is intended to narrate the history of the company, its tragedies and triumphs. Almost exclusively, the documents are the product of my imagination based on my readings and research of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. The work is documentary in nature and is intended to narrate the company's growth in terms of its founders, watershed events in its history such as The Great Fire and the appointment of Rokala 7 former Artistic Director Amold Spohr, to the rise of shining stars of the ballet, such as prima ballerina Evelyn Hart. The work is an exploration of the multi-genre text and is formatted as such; the text is structured to appear as documents and thus, only prose pieces are double spaced; others are spaced so as to reflect the nature of each individual document. While most documents are the product of my imagination, some actual documents, referenced by footnotes, have been included to provide historical links and authenticate the narrative voices in the poem. Others are based on actual documents and have been referenced where the originals have been edited, rephrased, reshaped and reorganuedto suit my purposes. All pieces are structured to appear as documents ranging from poems to press releases, conversations to menus and have been formatted to reflect the kinds of documents they simulate and, thus, are neither consistently formatted nor double-spaced. In most cases I have double-spaced prose passages in order to enhance readability. The collection is an experimentation of form and narrative voices; it is meant neither to be exhaustive nor entirely factual. It is a melding of fiction and non-fiction, poetry and prose, and is intended largely as a tribute to the people, present and past, who have influenced and immersed themselves in the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and have shaped it into the company it is today. Rokala 8 I /tn troductícn, Rokala 9 I first decided to do my creative writing thesis on the Royal Winnipeg Ballet after completing an assignment for Professor Arnason's Winnipeg in Literature course. The assignment was to represent either a site or an organization in Winnipeg. I chose to research the RWB and handed in a multi- geffe text in documents, drawing on the company's history, founding, people and watershed events. This project grew into what is now my thesis. I conceived of the piece in terms of a layering of narrative, poetry and prose and documents. Because the thesis is a mixture of poetry and prose, fiction and non-fiction, the multi-genre format fits the task perfectly in its ability to showcase a variety of perspectives and voices. Organized chronologically, the text reflects a version of events while leaving room for individual voices, personal accounts and re-tellings. It is not, nor is intended to be, a history of the RWB. Ultimately, my creative writing thesis is a literary work and may be defured as a post-modern long poem celebrating the variety of voices of this central cultural institution. I have long been fascinated with multi-geffe texts, both in the classroom as a teacher and in my personal reading and writing. The following authors and texts were indispensable and coloured my vision of my creative writing thesis from the very beginning: Michael Ondaatje's The Collected Works of Billy the Kid;FrankDavey's The Abbotsford Guide to India; and Tim O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods. Michael Ondaatje's The Collected Works of Billy the Kid is a wonderful text because of its questioning and exploration of representation and its use of polyphonic voices to deconstruct the mythology of a historical figure. Most of Rokala l0 what I have taken from this text and incorporated into my own seems to be the oscillation of the text between prose and poetry and among different narrative voices. While Ondaatje shifts the narrative between Billy and other characters such as Paulita Maxwellr, in a similar way, I have set up dif[erent narrative voices such as Betty Farrally, Arnold Spohr and Evelyn Hart in order to more strongly resonate against one another while the story of the development of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet unfolds. Ondaatje sets up a fictitious "exclusive jail interview" of Billy,2 while I set up an imagined conversation between RWB founders Gweneth Lloyd and Betty Fanally. Both serve to reveal character and present a history'truthfully" in documentary form. In both texts monologues also serve to reveal plot as well as character; Ondaatje's spotlights Paulita Maxwell, mine Arnold Spohr. My text also mirrors Ondaatje's in terms of its use of poþhonic narration whereby the unoffrcial voices of those close to Billy and Billy himself present a more personal, unofficial history not found in history texts. In Ondaatje's text the language is informal and crass, the voices belligerent and threatening, emotional and vulnerable. I purposely imitated Ondaatje's informal language in my "history" so as to make the writing emotional, creative and charged with the same dynamic spirit of the RWB and dance itself. Because of this, my unofficial history of the ballet is more accessible and not relegated merely to the purveyors of high culture, as most ballet troupes suggest. My language is emotional and passionate and provides rnany perspectives from which the ballet's "history" is t Micahel Ondaatje, The Collected Works of Billy the Kid: Left Handed Poezs (Toronto: Anansi, 1970)29. 2 Ondaaqe 81. Rokala 1l experienced and lived actively. By its very nature it questions whose history is being reflected and defures it as a history of the coÍrmon people as Ondaatje's text does. The "history" is personal, flawed and exists on an emotional and creative level rather than one which is formal, academic, or privileged. These histories are unoffrcial, the histories of the people who lived them, not those mere documentors who appear after the fact to record what has akeady happened to others and to which the author remains aloof. Frank Davey's The Abbotsford Guide to IndÌa has served as a model for my writing in his mixing of different textual geffes, but especially in terms of the text's organuation.
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